Bitcoin has lost the $80,000 level as selling pressure and market uncertainty combined to test the resilience of a recovery that had been building since April’s low. The breakdown is significant and XWIN Research Japan has published a structural analysis that puts the current weakness in a context that goes significantly deeper than a level of technical support that does not hold.
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The analysis starts with a premise that re-maps how to understand the entire Bitcoin market of 2026. This cycle is structurally different from the previous ones. ETFs, corporate bond allocations, interest rate dynamics, regulatory development, and dollar liquidity conditions are now influencing Bitcoin’s price behavior in ways that did not exist during its run from 2020 to 2021. The asset has been institutionalized – but the on-chain data tells a more complicated story about what actually drives daily price movements.
The Coinbase Premium Index is where the structural concern becomes most visible. The benchmark measures the price difference between Coinbase – the main platform for US institutional spot buying – and offshore exchanges such as Binance. During the 2020 to 2021 bull market, that premium remained largely positive, reflecting continued U.S. institutional demand flowing into the spot market through the most regulated and supervised market.
By 2026, that premium has repeatedly turned negative – a reading that XWIN Research Japan identifies as the gap between the story of institutional adoption and the reality of where actual spot demand currently stands.
Two realities and the question that determines what comes next
The XWIN Research Japan analysis simultaneously holds two conflicting truths and refuses to resolve them prematurely.
The long-term picture remains structurally constructive. Currency reserves have fallen to approximately 2.68 million BTC – coins leaving exchanges and moving at a steady pace into long-term holdings, ETF custody and low-liquidity storage. Less Bitcoin available on exchanges means less immediate supply on the sell side, and the directional trend of that reduction supports the supply squeeze argument underlying the long-term bullish case.

Bitcoin Exchange Netflow | Source: CryptoQuant
The short-term picture tells a different story. Open interest has soared since April 2026, while funding rates remain volatile – the hallmark of a market where leverage-driven futures activity dominates price discovery rather than true spot accumulation. Recent price movements, including the recovery from the April low and the current drop below $80,000, reflect derivatives positioning more than the organic spot market demand that characterized Bitcoin’s most sustained progress.
The Exchange Stablecoin Ratio adds the missing piece. The decline in stablecoin holding capital – the dry powder sitting on exchanges ready to be deployed for spot purchases – confirms that the aggressive USDT and USDC inflows that fueled the 2021 rally have not returned on a similar scale.
The demand that XWIN Research Japan identifies as the defining demand for this cycle follows directly from these three signals. Bitcoin has built the institutional infrastructure – ETFs, corporate bonds, regulatory frameworks – that the previous cycle completely lacked. What has not yet built up is the sustained demand in the spot market that the institutional infrastructure is turning into a sustainable bull market. Whether that question comes, and when, is what the next phase of price action will answer.
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Bitcoin Tests Crucial Support as Recovery Momentum Continues to Fade
Bitcoin is trading around $76,900 after extending its rejection from the $81,000-$82,000 resistance zone, a region that continues to limit any recovery attempt since April. The daily chart shows BTC now falling below the 100-day moving average while remaining firmly stuck below the declining 200-day moving average, reinforcing the broader bearish structure that still dominates the market.

Bitcoin Price is Testing Critical Demand Level | Source: BTCUSDT chart on TradingView
The recovery from the February capitulation low around $63,000 initially showed constructive momentum, with Bitcoin reclaiming the $74,000 support area and showing a series of higher highs in April and early May. However, bullish momentum weakened significantly as price approached long-term resistance, with repeated failed breakouts creating a lower-high formation near local highs.
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Importantly, Bitcoin is now approaching the highlighted demand zone between $72,000 and $74,000, an area that previously served as a base for the broader recovery. Holding this region could allow BTC to stabilize and attempt a new recovery phase. However, a decisive collapse below support would likely expose the market to a deeper retracement towards the broader accumulation range around $64,000-$65,000.
Volume during the latest decline remains high compared to recent consolidation phases, indicating that active selling pressure continues to drive price action. Combined with weakening Coinbase Premium values and unstable futures positioning, the chart reflects a market that is still struggling to transition to a sustainable spot-driven bullish trend.
Featured image of ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com
